I believe the foundation of the American economy and politics rests on contradictions. For example, it is legal for the most profitable industry in the world (oil) to skim off $ 4 billion in profit before taxes, but if an individual should protest this “depletion allowance” by refusing to pay for a $40 fill up, the police will rush to arrest them, guns drawn. The only real crime in America is to not stealing enough.
Consider the rise and fall of Hugh Joseph Addonizio (above). When asked why, after twelve years as a respected congressman, he decided to run for mayor of Newark, the short, bald, bullnecked blunt man they called “The Pope of New Jersey” explained, “There's no money in being a congressman, but you can make a million bucks as mayor of Newark" Over two terms, from 1962 to 1969, Mayor Addonizio made more than a million dollars. But as usual with capitalists, that was still not enough.
At the end of February 1959, after Jewish mobster Abner Zwillman, was found hanging by the neck in his West Orange apartment - just after receiving a subpoena to testify before a grand jury - a 60 year old Genovese crime family capo named Richie-”the-boot”- Boiardo (above) was given sole permission to plunder Newark, New Jersey.
Richie (above) earned his moniker because he avoided wiretapping prosecutors by using public pay-phone booths. In Jersey parlance, Richie was always “in da boot”. It was a very profitable place for Richie to be.
During the late 1040's and early 1950's, Newark invested heavily in urban renewal, replacing thousands of substandard single family homes with 46 huge impersonal substandard apartment blocks. The construction of those buildings proved a gold mine for organized crime.
These new white elephants were badly built, but the graft from their construction allowed Richie the Boot to build a "Transylvanian traditional" mansion and estate in Livingston, New Jersey. He adorned the gated entrance with a garish statue of himself astride a horse (above), towering over a row of busts of his children, resembling, to my mind, clowns in an amusement park game ready to be shot with water pistols. And in a position of honor, at statue Richie's foot was the effigy of his eldest son Anthony, aka "Tony Boy".
Tony Boy (above) took over the family business just as a long planned Southside Sewer project was finally getting started. The primary contractor was Paul Rigo, who claimed he had founded his company after winning $65,000 in the Irish Sweepstakes. He pleaded with Richie "The Boot" to lower his required kickback to 5%, but Richie insisted, “You'll pay 10%, or I'll break both your legs.” Then Tony Boy offered a solution,
Tony Boy set up a shell company called Kantor Supply. The subcontractors all paid their kickbacks with regular business checks. Kantor Supply would then issue invoices to match those payments. Rigo could use his construction company to launder that cash before distributing it to Richie, Tony Boy and “The Pope”, Mayor Addonizio. For this service, Rigo could keep 10% of everybody's kick, making a hell-of-a profit for himself.
There were just three problems with this gravy train express. First, there has never been honor among thieves. After all, they not only steal for a living they also steal out of habit. Secondly, Tony Boy was seeing a psychiatrist, and some of his soldiers had taken to calling him “nut case.” Another of Tony Boy's soldiers, Anthony “Little Pussy” Russo (above), even called him a “weasel”, and referred to “The Boot” as “the most treacherous fucker in the world”. And fourthly, there was a real Kantor behind Kantor Supply. Plumber Irving Kantor took a 5% cut for running the shell company, but he was not a healthy man. And unhealthy men are prone to soul cleansing confessions. And lastly, in part because of all the graft, Newark was not a healthy city.
By 1965 Newark was half Italian and half African American, and burdened with an astronomical tax rate, thanks to all those kickbacks. The manufacturers in Newark, who had once paid middle class salaries, had moved south to find lower taxes and cheaper workers. Capitalism again. . The local unemployment rate was over 8%, and among young black men in Newark it was almost 40%. Ten percent of the city residents survived on welfare. Of the 136,000 apartments in the city, over 40,000 of which (mostly those (above) built by Richie Boiardo ), were substandard or dilapidated.
To make matters even worse, Mayor Addonizio had just announced a plan to replace several public housing blocks with a medical school, proving that in Newark “urban renewal” had become synonymous with “Negro removal”. And finally, of the 1,400 officers in the police force, only 150 were African-American. This all came to a head about 9:40 pm on the evening of Wednesday 12 July, 1967
On that hot, humid night, two Newark Police Officers, John DeSimone and Vito Pontrelli, pulled over a taxi at the corner of 15th Avenue and South 9th Street. According to the officers, the cab had illegally passed them on the right side. According to the taxi's African-American driver, John Smith (above) the police car was double parked.
Half an hour later, when a crowd saw the bleeding driver dragged into the 4th Precinct station, it set off six days and nights of looting and burning that left 26 people dead, and $10 million in property damage. The root cause of the Newark Riot, said a Governor's commission, was a “pervasive feeling of corruption” in Newark. The most common phrase heard around town was “Everything in city hall is for sale.”
The Essex county prosecutor now empaneled a grand jury to investigate the new summer home Mayor Addonizio had just bought with a loan from Paul Rigo. But the minute that happened, Richie and Tony Boy were aware of it. One of Tony's soldiers, John “Big Pussy” Russo (above), bluntly warned Paul Rigo “Keep your mouth shut.”
And when the mayor was served with a subpoena, Rigo found a note in his car which read, "This could have been a bomb. Keep your mouth shut." Not surprisingly Rigo lied to the grand jury. Then the IRS subpoenaed the books for Kantor Supply.
Caught in a three way squeeze between the mob,. the feds and the grand jury, Paul Rigo asked his lawyer to cut a deal with the feds. Almost immediately, Rigo received a phone call, telling him bluntly, “Keep the hell away from the federal building!”. When he realized there must be a leak in the prosecutor's office, Paul Rigo was on the next plane for Acapulco.
From Mexico Paul Rigo called a high powered lawyer in Washington, D.C.. and through him revealed to the feds that he had a diary, recording in code every sub contractor who paid kickbacks, when and how much, and every mobster and politician who received cash, with dates, and amounts. Addonizio (above) was dragged back to the U.S. and given a seat in front of the grand jury. This time, “The Pope” took the fifth amendment. It didn't help. Addonizio was indicted along with 11 others, for 65 counts of money laundering, extortion, tax fraud, and perjury.
Even that didn't stop him from mounting a campaign for a third term as mayor. He would eventually lose the job, but even while on trial Hugh Addonizio won 45% of the vote. The over taxes citizens of Newark preferred they devil they knew because they had been trained to hate blacks rather than the mobsters who were stealing from them.
The trial began with Irving Kantor, testifying from his hospital bed. The dying man recounted his phone conversations with Richie “the Boot”, and how he handed the cash over to Paul Rigo, for distribution.. Rigo testified for two straight weeks, detailing many late night meetings in empty offices. It was during one of those meetings that Rigo told Addonizio, "I don't know why in the world you ever left Washington and a nice job in Congress to come up here in this mess.” Addonizio (above) had replied, “Simple. There's no money in Washington, but you can make a million bucks as mayor of Newark.”
The case was handed to the jury just before 5:00 pm, 22 July, 1970. They were back by midnight. Their verdict was guilty for all the defendants on all counts. Two months later the judge sentenced Addonizio and Richie the Boot to ten years in prison and $25,000 each in fines, each.
It wasn't a bad outcome for the mayor, really. Convicted of “literally delivering Newark into the hands of organized crime”, and for the bargain basement price of a million dollars, Hugh Addonizio could almost pay the fine out of petty cash. It was the tax penalties that took most of his money, And on the bright side, after just five years, Addonizo was released on parole. In "retirement" he bred and raced homing pigeons. Not the sport of kings, but evidently the sport of Popes.
Anthony “Tony Boy” Boiardo also died of a heart attack, on 20 April, 1978. Just a year later, the big mouth, Anthony “Little Pussy” Russo, was found in his bathrobe and slippers, with three bullets in his brain. He'd been killed by three members of his own crew, who shot him and then stole cash and property from his house. A day after his body was discovered and removed, the assassins broke back into the murder scene, and returned the property. But they kept the money.
The longest living of the conspirators was Richie-”the-boot”- Boiardo (above) . After Tony Boy's death he rarely left his Livingston estate, tending his tomatoes under a sign that read “The Godfather's Garden”, as Richie was convinced he had been the role model for the infamous literary and movie gangster, Vito Corleone. The Boot suffered a heart attack and died in November of 1984, at the age of 95 - just another crook who had not stolen enough to become a hero of capitalism. Crime, you see, does not pay. But politics does, and well enough to make it's crimes legal.
- 30 -
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please share your reaction.